When we walked around Broadway Market in East London, we found Isle of Olive, a deli & shop selling a variety of authentic Greek food products, sourced from independent producers, agricultural cooperatives and passionate artisans: such as extra virgin olive oils, olives, pastes & tapenade spreads, Feta cheese, honey, Spoon sweets & jams, a selection of natural Greek herbs, spices and herbal teas, preserved vegetables & fishes, dried fruits & nuts, Rusks, and so on. The exterior of the shop looks like a small office in the boring apartment complex and isn’t really appealing, but the inside has a lot of charm; presentation of the products is nice, so as its simple & cute interior. There is also an eating space where you can have some Greek snacks or sweets as well. The shop is not really visible from lively Broadway Market, and hope people can find it so that this little cute place can survive.

I enjoyed Greek food a lot when we traveled to Peloponnese last year. Now I make Greek salad myself, and feta I bought from Isle of Olive was delicious. I was also fascinated to find some Greek herbal teas that rarely seen here. I love Greek Mountain Tea, the infusion made out of the flowers and leaves of the Ironwort plant, which is the most popular herbal tea in Greece, I had it at a small inn in Greece. Other teas are made of the plants I’ve never thought of making a tea out of, such as sage and St John’s Wort. I may need St John’s Wort tea for keeping up my mood during the long, dark winter.

Other than the shop near Broadway Market, Isle of Olive has also a stall on Angel’s Chapel Market every Sunday and at other food events, fairs and festivals, or check their online shop if you prefer.

Recently many new cafés and eateries have opened on/near Baker Street, between Marylebone Road and Oxford Street, where used to be dull area with nothing much. Most of them are chains, unfortunately, but there are few independent places. One of them is this cute Greek deli & café Food Filosophy on George Street, off Baker Street. They serve a selection of fresh home made Greek dishes, sandwiches and salads for breakfast, lunch, and juice and a cup of tea or coffee for the afternoon break, for eat-in or takeaway. You can also buy quality Greek food products as well.

After having long break, I restart my blog today, though I am a bit rusty in writing.

2 months+ to go to the London Olympic 2012. On May 18th, specially decorated British Airways flight “The Firefly” brought Olympic Flame from Athen to Royal Naval Air Station in Cornwall, south west of England. After arrival, the London 2012 torch was lit from the Flame at the welcome ceremony and was passed to former England football team captain David Beckham who lit a cauldron where it burned overnight (Daily Mail). The next day on 19th, the Olympic Torch Relay started from Land’s End, carried by the first torchbearer Ben Ainslie, three-times Olympic gold medallist in sailing from Cornwall (Daily Telegraph). The Flame will travel about 8,000 miles in 70-day around the UK (and a bit of Ireland), carried by 8,000 torchbearers, to the final destination, London’s Olympic Stadium, on the opening ceremony on July 27th (Olympic Torch Relay Route).

I happened to find the information of how to bring the Olympic Flame on the British Airways inflight magazine “high life“. The Olympic Flame is classified as a symbolic flame so it is permitted to be carried on board an aircraft subject to special authorisation, according to the article. After being lit by the “power of the sun” at a ceremony at the Temple of Hera in Olympia, following an 8-day relay tour of Greece, the Flame was handed to London 2012 delegates in the Handover Ceremony at the Athen’s Panathinaiko Stadium on May 17. Then the Flame traveled in a set of four ceremonial lanterns that are secured in a specially designed cradle, firmly fixed to the business class seats 1A and 1B with a seat belt and Velcro strap, accompanied by an Olympic Flame Minder.

聖火運搬という重要任務を果たしたブリティッシュ・エアウェイズの「Firefly」/ “The Firefly”BA’s special airplane that carried the Flame